Pāpa-bheda, Naraka-yātanā, Mahāpātaka-vicāra, Atonement Limits, Daśa-vidhā Bhakti, and Gaṅgā as Final Remedy
अनर्प्पितानि कर्माणि भस्मविन्यस्तद्रव्यवत् । नित्यं नैमित्तिकं काम्यं यच्चान्यन्मोक्षमाधनम् ॥ १३७ ॥
anarppitāni karmāṇi bhasmavinyastadravyavat | nityaṃ naimittikaṃ kāmyaṃ yaccānyanmokṣamādhanam || 137 ||
កម្មដែលមិនបានឧទ្ទិសជូនព្រះ (វិស្ណុ) គឺដូចទ្រព្យមានតម្លៃដែលដាក់លើផេះ—ក្លាយជាឥតប្រយោជន៍។ មិនថាជាកិច្ចប្រចាំថ្ងៃ ពិធីតាមឱកាស ពិធីសម្រាប់បំណង ឬអ្វីផ្សេងទៀតដែលយកធ្វើជាមធ្យោបាយទៅមុខ្សៈ ក៏មានន័យបានតែពេលឧទ្ទិសជាអំណោយ។
Sanatkumara (in instruction to Narada, within the Narada–Sanatkumara dialogue)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhakti
It teaches that any practice—ritual, duty, or even a liberation-oriented discipline—becomes spiritually effective only when offered with devotion; otherwise it is wasted effort, like wealth thrown into ashes.
Bhakti is implied as the consecrating principle: dedicating (arpana) one’s actions to the Lord transforms all karma—nitya, naimittika, and kāmya—into worship and makes it a support for inner purification and liberation.
It classifies Vedic action into nitya, naimittika, and kāmya categories—an applied ritual framework used in Dharmaśāstra and Śrauta/Smārta practice—while stressing that correct intention and dedication are essential for the rite’s true efficacy.